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Registered: 10/27/10
Posts: 20
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#163747 - 01/30/10 04:29 PM
Re: 1929 landau Imperial sed convt, Trim!
[Re: Pre25Chev4]
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Registered: 11/22/01
Posts: 10233
Loc: The Great State of TEXAS
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Ken, Maybe the post I made a few days ago, quoted below, can add some more credibility for this car. I can add a bit of family history to this discussion. The first Chevrolet purchased in our family was indeed a new '29 Imperial Landau Sedan from the Chevy dealer in Marshall Michigan. It was owned for approximately six months before being traded on a Marmon Sedan. My grandmother told me that it was the worst car they ever owned and they took it back to the dealer because "the cylinders were bored on the bias". Now you non-seamstress people will not understand the quote. Translated into automotive vernacular it meant that the engine burned large quantities of oil because the cylinders were not machined correctly. It is my understanding that many of the early production '29 engines had enough problems that they were replaced or had to be repaired by dealer mechanics. That is still a problem in todays world though not as often as in the past.
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How Sweet the roar of a Chevy four!
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#164425 - 02/05/10 03:11 PM
Re: 1929 landau Imperial sed convt, Trim!
[Re: Pre25Chev4]
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Registered: 01/08/02
Posts: 14894
Loc: West Allis,Wi.
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Is this where the 300 began???
I was sorting out some of my magazines and ran across this in the No,-Dec 1972 issue of "The Action Era Vehicle", the publication of the Comtemporary Historical Vehicle Assn.
Article "One Mans Chevy Treasure....Whats it All About" By Gene Davis. He was a VCCA member at that time but I believe he has passed on. Mr. Davis says, "It has been estimated there were only about 300 of these models produced, but if any one knows for sure, I'd like to have them contact me."
Now it is his car that is pictured in "60 Years of Chevrolet" . Under the picture of Mr. Davis and his 1929 Imperial Landau in "60 Years" is the caption "He has good reason to be proud of his car because the car is most rare, most unusual and most sought after Chevrolet. Approximately 300 were built" ......"Surprisingly, though only 300 were built, there are at least 16 still know to be in existence."
I believe this is where the 300 number began as so many articles have used information that was published in "60 Years" and the errors in that book have found their way into other publications.
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Chevgene
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#165347 - 02/14/10 08:17 AM
Re: 1929 landau Imperial sed convt, Trim!
[Re: beachbum]
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Registered: 11/23/01
Posts: 20039
Loc: Eagle Point, Oregon
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Thanks for getting the body and serial numbers for us. That is some great information! I am familiar with the Dick Davies car and I have seen it several times. The "O" in front of the body number would indicate the Oakland factory. Many of the other convertible landaus don't have a factory designation code letter in front of the body number, so that is what makes this body number so interesting. Also, since the body number on this car does have the factory designation code, that would help to indicate that the convertible landau body was made in other factories as you suggested. The "1879" would indicate that this was the 1,879th convertible landau made in the Oakland factory. The serial number of AC 27347 is not complete since the serial number should have a "6" (designating Oakland) in front of the "AC". Anyway, the "27347" means that the car was the 26,347th vehicle made in the Oakland factory in 1929 since the serial numbers started at 1,001. Did you, by chance, happen to check out the job number to confirm that it was 8860?
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The Mangy Old Mutt
"If It's Not Junk.....It's Not Treasure!"
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#167258 - 03/06/10 11:52 PM
Re: 1929 landau Imperial sed convt, Trim!
[Re: ccr7]
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Shade Tree Mechanic
Registered: 09/12/06
Posts: 152
Loc: Vancouver, Washington
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Hello, We ended up going to the beach that weekend since we had such wonderful weather. During the next work week I got sick so have not had the opportunity to go up to Mikes until today. The actual serial number on the wood cross-member was the same 1879 but the symbol in front of it was a deep V inside of a vertical rectangle, almost like an M with a bar across the bottom. Does this mean anything to you? The engine serial is 575811. I forgot to get the engine date code as we were supposed to meet some other friends to go to a plant nursery. I sure would like to know how many of these things are out there and were they made at all plants. Was there a Fisher Body plant near each one of the GM plants? That would mean Chev, Pontiac, Buick, Olds, Oakland, LaSalle, Cadillac etc. plants or did they have like six or seven and ship the bodies. If that is the case there would have to have been at least maybe 100,000 carpenters and at least double that many more helpers. Did they have a central woodworking plant in say Michigan where wood was plentiful, ship the machined wood to subassembly body plants and assemble them onto the bodies at the final assembly plant? The numbers and logistics are just mind blowing when you think that in 1929 Chevrolet manufactured 1,300,000 vehicles alone.
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#167298 - 03/07/10 01:41 PM
Re: 1929 landau Imperial sed convt, Trim!
[Re: beachbum]
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Backyard Mechanic
Registered: 11/30/01
Posts: 257
Loc: Monrovia, California
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Well - this brings another surprise - a [M] stamp Fisher Body that came out of the Oakland, California Code 6 prefix Plant. The [M] stamp in wood as the BODY No. prefix under the seat on the rear side of the seat heal board as been an almost 50 year mystery to me that I don't recall has ever been mention before. The day I purchase my 1927 Capital AA Coupe on Thanksgiving weekend in 1962, and cleaning it up to check it out, did I first observe that the [M] prefix was stamp in the wood while the letter '0' was stamp (or imprinted) on the body plate on the firewall. So what Fsher Body Plant use this [M] code? I just do not know!
What I do know is the Fisher Body Oakland Plant was the smallest Assembly Plant in 1927 at 120,459 sq ft with Janesville Assembly Plant at 225,190 sq ft. Both these two plants were owned by the Fisher Body St. Louis Company which was a 776,900 sq ft that was a complete Body Plant The Flint Assembly Plant was 146,000 sq ft, the Tarrytown plant was 153,700 sq ft, and the Norwood was 190,000 sq ft. The last 3 plants were supplied by the Fisher manufacturing plants in Detroit with 5,114,954 sq ft and Cleveland at 1,451,248 sq ft. It is possibe that the much larger St Louis supplied at time to time, "Body in White" to Oakland where the Oakland plant then finished the paint and interior. Then the [M] might stand for Misouri built Body in White? kenK
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